Vatican Astronomer: 'God Particle' Is Exciting But Has No Theological Bearing

'It is a wonderful piece of science,' said Jesuit Brother Guy Consolmagno, a researcher and spokesman at the Vatican Observatory.

EWTN NEWS/CNA

While it has no direct bearing on theology or revelation, the scientific discovery hailed by some as the “God particle” is an important achievement, a Vatican astronomer says.

“It is a wonderful piece of science,” said Jesuit Brother Guy Consolmagno, a researcher and spokesman at the Vatican Observatory, in a July 5 interview with EWTN News.

On July 4, the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) publicized results suggesting it had found the elusive “Higgs boson” particle, thought to explain the physical mass of objects in the universe, by means of subatomic experiments carried on at the Large Hadron Collider in Geneva.

Brother Consolmagno said the apparent discovery of the Higgs boson was a “delight,” particularly given the gradual progress of most physical research and the resources invested in running the Swiss particle accelerator.

“It is nice to see such a big step occur that everybody can celebrate,” the Vatican astronomer remarked, congratulating the researchers who “finally got something out of the years and time and effort they’ve put into it.”

Although officials at CERN have not definitively claimed to find the particle, the group's director general, professor Rolf Heuer, said researchers had “observed a new particle consistent with a Higgs boson.”

“As a layman I would now say I think we have it,” Heuer announced at a press conference in Geneva.

Nicknamed “the God particle” by physicist Leon Lederman, the Higgs boson was postulated by British physicist Peter Higgs during the 1960s as a necessary component in the “Standard Model” of the universe. The Standard Model involves four distinct forces: electromagnetism, the “strong nuclear force,” the “weak nuclear force” and gravity. While scientists have made progress in their understanding of the first three, the force of gravitation is thought to hinge on the previously unobserved Higgs boson.

Various kinds of subatomic particles, such as quarks, leptons and so-called “force carriers,” are thought to make up the observable world, according to the Standard Model. While these particles account for many observable phenomena, the Higgs boson is believed to be necessary to give them their mass.

While the results from the Large Hadron Collider point to the discovery of this missing component in the Standard Model, Brother Consolmagno observed that there is “a hint that something else is going on” in the results, “which is always exciting.”

He also clarified that the discovery, despite its nickname, “has nothing to do with theology or God” in any direct sense.

“The name, the 'God particle,' was given to it as a joke by Leon Lederman,” the Vatican astronomer recalled. “It was basically a provocative title for book he was writing on particle physics.”

“He said that if there was a particle that could exist that could explain all the little things we wanted to explain, it would be a gift from God. It is a metaphor and has nothing to do with theology.”

DON’T MISS THIS , DON’T MISS THIS, I have just been looking at the new photos released from NASA from Mars, “did you know” , if you look at the large rock centre in the photo, you will see the markings of a crucifix. Nasa said the image was presented in false colour to emphasise differences between materials in the scene. It was assembled from 817 component images taken between December 21, 2011, and May 8, 2012, while Opportunity was stationed on an outcrop informally named Greeley Haven, on the rim of ancient the Endeavour Crater. could that be greeting Heaven ??????

their words, as Opportunity’s image shows the terrain, including an impact crater “created billions of years ago” , around the outcrop where it spent most of the recent Martian winter.

I have put the link in, the rock has been broken, not impacting on the cross,

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